Community Brag Posts

Toy Box Gone Wrong

Submitted by vtmelody on Thu, 05/30/2013 - 10:08

We went exactly as planned in the Build a Toybox outline, but bought 12x1 instead of 16x1. This caused a problem when we started putting it together. The two short sides were taller than the long sides. We decided to make lemons from lemonade and turn it into a toolbox/toybox, and in the end really liked the result. We added an additional cut with 1.5" holes on either side and a 1.5" diameter 36" long dowel rod for the handle. We added casters to the bottom and poof! done. Fun project! We made it for our soon to be nephew and filled with gifts for the baby shower.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$50
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
Wood Stain with blue paint on top and cut out a mustache for the design then painted around it.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

PB Connor Table

Connor table

Estimated Time Investment
An Hour or Two (0-2 Hours)
Finish Used
Special Walnut
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Platform bed

My first build!!!! I live in an apartment, so I was nervous to undertake any project... luckily I was able to borrow a garage one weekend to build it, and then moved it in and finished it. It took more than just the weekend to complete.  It probably took me a lot longer than if I had more experience and knew what I was doing...I stopped every two minutes to double check myself and reread the directions lol. I'm so happy with how it turned out. I used the IKEA center beam from my old bed for the center support, and cut wood slats for my mattress to rest on so I don't have to use a box spring. It looks so much more expensive than it was. my  next project is a headboard...as soon as I have a space to build it in :)

Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Minwax polyshades- satin honey. I used minwax wood conditioner as well.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Turquoise Lockers

Submitted by gertie1208 on Mon, 03/14/2011 - 16:15

Always wanted lockers, now I have them! We built these in a couple of afternoons, but took forever to sand and finish (of course, the sudden onslaught of winter didn't help.) Added 10 inches to the height of the hutches to fit our adult coats better. We are absolutely in love with them!

Estimated Cost
$150
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Oops paint, in a lovely turquoise and several coats of minwax polycrylic.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Spa Side Table

I completed this table with my 5 year old daughter as my assistant. My husband requested a table to put next to our new hot tub to set his drinks on and this is perfect. We only put one board on the top because I felt since it would be outside, I wanted a smooth top. I just screwed it in diagonally from the bottom. I also used spar varnish since it would be outside.

Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
Rust-o-Leum Ultimate Wood Stain in Kona
Semi-gloss Spar Varnish (3 coats)
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Small shop layout

This week's project was to reorganize my small garage shop for a better layout. Hopefully you can get some ideas from my shop to better organize your own.

 

Blog: http://www.lanebroswoodshop.com/2015/04/new-shop-layout.html

 

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VuRVXdg-YNA

Estimated Cost
Free!
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Rustic Bathroom Cubby with Makeup Box, Mirror, and Jewelry Hooks

Submitted by Malka on Wed, 09/13/2017 - 01:25

Fiance wanted some rustic bathroom decor, and asked for 3 things. It should have a makeup box, jewelry hooks, and a touch up mirror. She was super happy with the finished product. Stained in Early American and given a Semigloss poly.

Estimated Cost
$16 for 1x12 board, $4 for jewelry hooks. Everything else was scraps and stuff on hand.
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
Minwax Early American, Minwax Semigloss Poly
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Knock off Hyde Console Table

Submitted by Sherri1230 on Mon, 06/03/2013 - 14:28

I am cheap and I have expensive taste. I love, love, love Pottery Barn. I also love Michael Kors, Coach, Gucci, Jimmy Choo, and all things pretty. Especially pretty shiny things.

So I regress...

Anyways, I have had this bare spot in my living room and it has slowly been driving me crazy. Through much painstaking research I have decided that I wanted something like the Hyde Pottery Barn Console Table. Okay, not something like.... I wanted the Hyde Pottery Barn Console Table, but it also would cost $500. Hahaha. $500 for a console table. That's just ridiculous says my cheap, fugal self.

So I look at ebay and craigslist... nope, no one selling my dream table. And then a miracle happens.... I stumble across Ana White's blog. I think I've found my new blog BFF!

I followed her plans exactly and I decided to paint the bottom off white and stain the top walnut.

This was my first ever furniture build and I'm so excited by how it turned out!

Thanks, Ana!

Estimated Cost
$50
Estimated Time Investment
Day Project (6-9 Hours)
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Comments

Slat Bench from Palettes

Submitted by jetpad on Fri, 09/15/2017 - 06:32

This was made from several heavy duty palettes that were used for delivering stone. Because of the wood I could get off the palettes, I switched the thin and thick pieces so that the slat gaps were where the 2x4 pieces were missing instead of the 1x4s. 

Estimated Cost
$10 (for glue and screws)
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
None
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Original farmhouse bed-King

Submitted by AngelaJB on Sat, 10/09/2021 - 11:05

This is the kingsized original farmhouse bed. The bed was pretty easy, I didn't bother with pocket holes and assembled it pretty quickly with some help. It is sturdy and beautiful and makes me smile every time I walk in my room. I LOVE it and can't thank you enough for sharing your plans! Angela

Comments

Modified Farmhouse Bed

This was our first "Big" build.... Our bed.  I modified the footboard as I like taller footboards and it keeps the mattress in super snug!!!! Love this bed with light stain!!!!  Also we used tongue and groove boards for the head and footboard!!! Went together so nice!!!

Estimated Cost
$120.00
Estimated Time Investment
Day Project (6-9 Hours)
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

A Big Patio Planter

Submitted by Jake on Tue, 06/04/2013 - 17:47

I have a really boring backyard patio so I thought I would spice it up with flowers but I could not find a plan for a large right angle planter. So I made up my own.

The planter is made from cedar fencing but pine for the top trim and the corner legs. The legs have grooves that the sides slide into and are not screwed or glued in place. That is so you can remove the top trim and then just pull the sides out to replace them as needed or to even change the size of the planter.

This planter is 18" high so it is comfortable to sit on but that also means you will need a lot of soil to fill it up. Mine took 26 40lb bags which is over 1/2 ton of soil. Add water and that planter is here to stay. But it also means that there is a large tendency for the sides to bulge along the bottom so I placed stop blocks along the bottom base and screwed into the base.

I planted Angelonia for color and sage, oregano, and thyme for spice. It was fun to build and came out well but it was expensive as the soil along was nearly $60. Add another $50 for lumber and screws and you have exceeded the magic $100 mark. Still a good deal, however.

Estimated Cost
$110
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Painted the top trim and legs with Behr water-based enamel and left the cedar to mellow on its own.
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

Rustic X Coffee Table First

Submitted by ShaunEDM on Mon, 05/04/2015 - 20:45

Came across this plan as my first wood working project. Took the corner brackets to a different level, spoke with a local blacksmith who created the brackets for me to give it a more rustic feel.  Created the nails, same way they were done in the early 1800's.

Total time took me longer than normal since this was my first project.  Otherise I could see hammering out one of these a day (excluding waiting for stain to dry)

Very excited to keep going, thanks for the great site Anna!

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$75 dollars roughly
Estimated Time Investment
Weekend Project (10-20 Hours)
Finish Used
Used Miniwax English Chestnut with Minwax® Polycrylic® Protective Finish.
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Cedar Planter with Trellis

Submitted by redhead_61 on Thu, 06/06/2013 - 15:13

I put the two planter boxes on this site together to get a perfect little lattice box for the space by my door. I get lots of compliments and hopefully soon I will have yummy jasmine welcoming my guests.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
free with scraps
Estimated Time Investment
Afternoon Project (3-6 Hours)
Finish Used
wood protector
Recommended Skill Level
Beginner

Dresser

Submitted by smettauer on Sat, 05/09/2015 - 06:18

My wife and I are expecting our first child, a baby girl, in September. I decided that I was going to make as much of the furniture as possible, and started with this dresser/changing table.

This is the first project I've made with drawers, and they were a bit of a challenge. Other than that building the dresser was straight forward. The drawer fronts are made from up-cycled deck boards and the knobs are from Anthropologie

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
The wood wasn't that expensive but the hardware (drawer pulls and slides) drove up the cost. In total probably around $300
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
oil-based white paint
red mahogany Varathane stain rubbed with black shoe polish
Recommended Skill Level
Intermediate

Comments

smettauer

Sat, 05/09/2015 - 06:21

Sorry the pics are upside down - when I created the post they were shown as being correct. I will try to update later

Square benchright

I really like the legs of this table but wanted a square, planked top.  I also used a stencil that I got from amazon for the design.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Cost
$30 each
Estimated Time Investment
An Hour or Two (0-2 Hours)
Finish Used
Eider White on legs and a mix of dark walnut/weathered oak on top.
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project

Leaning Hall Tree

Submitted by vendo on Wed, 10/20/2021 - 12:33

I had a small piece of 2x10 left over from this plan's original post, as well as some 2x4's and a scrap 1x2 laying around, so added the top key hook and stained instead of painted. Love how it turned out. I did the top angle a little different too, so it sits a bit closer to the wall, making it awesome for a narrow entryway or space. Easy to modify for whatever the need.

Built from Plan(s)

Two-tone kingsize bed- extra tall

My First Project

My husband and I had a problem.  We were tired of sleeping on a mattress on the floor, and most beds were out of the question because my husband is tall. 6'7" tall.  Ana White's plan looked perfect, but I had never built anything before, unless you count an improvised 'clean the gutters from the ground" stick.

I knew I had to make something that could be taken apart because we are renters right now, so it will take a little bit of work, but after some modifications to the plans, it will come apart when it needs to.  We are also not small big humans, so the bed is appropriately beefed up where it needed to be- to accommodate 2 big humans, 2 fairly large dogs, 150 lb latex foam mattress, and any future kids.

I also had to make changes to the King size plans because Ana's original plans have the mattress oriented sideways, which would be too short for us.

For extra storage space, a hangout for dust bunnies and dogs, and a just a plain tall bed for tall people, I made the foot-board posts taller, and attached the rails higher than the plans indicate.  I also made a platform for our mattress to sit on out of 2x4's, 2x6's, and 3/4" plywood.  This bed is STURDY.

To support the slats and mattress well, I hung a 2x6 with joist hangers in the middle of the bed frame (see picture below), and it stops the 2x4 slats and plywood from bending in the middle.

Built from Plan(s)
Estimated Time Investment
Week Long Project (20 Hours or More)
Finish Used
The panel boards were stained with two coats of Minwax Dark Walnut for 15 minutes each time before attaching the trim. Wood conditioner was applied before the first coat of stain.

Poly coat to be applied... later. When we will be away for a couple days after applying it.
Recommended Skill Level
Starter Project